Jiang Zehui, leader of the researchers responsible for decoding the genome, said the team began their work on the moso bamboo, the most common species used in the bamboo textile industry of China, in 2007, China’s state-run Xinhua News Agency reported.

China is the world’s biggest grower and user of bamboo with 9.5 million acres of moso bamboo, which accounts for 72 percent of the country’s bamboo-planting area.

One of the fastest-growing plants in the world, moso bamboo can grow 40 inches in just 24 hours if conditions are favorable.

The decoded genome will allow scientists to modify the species and find new uses for it, Han Bin, a senior genetics researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said.

The decoded genome will also help alleviate food shortages for giant pandas, Han said.

The World Bamboo Organization is a diverse group consisting of individual people, commercial businesses, non-profit associations, institutions, and allied trade corporations that all share a common interest = BAMBOO. The purpose of the WBO is to improve and promote this common interest, as well as the conditions affecting, and the industry surrounding, this common interest. We are dedicated to promoting the use of bamboo and bamboo products for the sake of the environment and economy.